Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 15 – Many of the
initial reactions on the meeting between Pope Francis and Russian Orthodox
Patriarch Kirill in Havana on Friday featured declarations that the outcome was
a clear victory for Moscow and the Russian Orthodox Church and a defeat for Rome
and for Roman Catholicism (e.g., novayagazeta.ru/society/71836.html).
But today, two more thoughtful
commentaries, one by Nikolay Mitrokhin, a Bremen-based specialist on Orthodoxy
(grani.ru/opinion/mitrokhin/m.248669.html),
and a second by Andrey Melnikov, editor of “NG-Religii” (ng.ru/faith/2016-02-15/3_kartblansh.html),
point out what one would have expected: the outcome was not a complete victory
or defeat for either side.
Mitrokhin argues that “the results
of the meeting of Pope Francis with Patriarch Kirill can be discussed in
various dimensions” and one’s judgment about its results depends on which one
any particular analyst or observer considers the most important once one goes
beyond PR-driven commentaries about how wonderful any such meetings supposedly
are.
Those focused more specifically on
Russian or Ukrainian policy, he suggests, will necessarily conclude that the
joint declaration of the two church leaders bears “in certain points a decidedly
pro-Russian character,” including its assertion that the conflict in Ukraine is
an internal matter, that both churches should avoid getting involved in the
conflict, and that divisions among Orthodox in Ukraine should be overcome by “canonical
norms.”
“From the document it becomes clear,”
Mitrokhin says, “that Kirill considers the Ukrainian situation in terms of a
conflict of Greek Catholics and Roman Catholics (and the supposedly controlled
by them authorities of the country)” on the one hand “and the Orthodox under
which he understands only the pro-Russian militants in the Donbas.”
Kirill thus received much of what he
wanted from the meeting, the church analyst says. “He not only fulfilled the assignments
of the Russian leadership but spent time on an alien ‘canonical territory’
(having marked Valentine’s Day with Fidel Castro)” and was able to insert many
arguments in the final document pleasing to him and the Kremlin.
The Russian patriarch thus did not
return to Moscow “with empty hands,” although what he got probably mattered
more to Vladimir Putin than to the “less than one percent of the population” in
Russia that attends Orthodox services “more or less regularly,” Mitrokhin
continues.
But Pope Francis did not leave with
empty hands either, although for him this meeting with Kirill was far less
important than it was for the Russian churchman. As the successor of St. Peter
and the leader of a billion Roman Catholics, he is simply in a different
position than the head of one branch of Orthodoxy.
For Francis, the chief thing is to
promote “fraternal communion and cooperation in order to advance Christian
principles (as the Vatican understands them) in the world.” How that is done
and with whom is a secondary concern.
Viewed from that perspective, the
establishment of “direct and fraternal” communion with the head of a major
Christian church “which for hundreds of years has stood in harsh opposition to
the Roman throne is a strategic success, one worth petty tactical concessions
on political issues of today.”
But Francis’ success was not limited
to that, Mitrokhin says. The Russian patriarch in a departure from his earlier
positions and those of the Kremlin “acknowledged the right of the Ukrainian
Greek Catholic Church to existence and its right to provide succor to its
believers.” That is important for Greek Catholics not only in Ukraine but those
in Russia and Kazakhstan.
“The thesis about fraternal churches
also opens the path to the legalization of the long-existing but up to now
semi-underground cooperation of individual parishes, priests, seminaries and
entire bishoprics of the Russian Orthodox Church with Catholic organizations,” something
that may have “a powerful influence on the entire climate” of relations between
confessions in Russia.
At the very least, Mitrokhin
suggests, this declaration will undermine the Orthodox fundamentalists in
Russia who have long been anti-Catholic and who can be counted on to view what
Kirill has conceded as a betrayal of their faith and their nation, thus posing
a challenge Kirill is likely going to be forced to respond to in the coming
weeks.
Melnikov also presents a more
balanced assessment of the meeting, noting to begin with that despite Russian and
Western media claims that this was “a meeting of the millennium,” the Havana
encounter was anything but. The Russian
Orthodox Church was only established in 1589, and Pope Paul VI already met the
Universal Patriarch Afinagor in 1964.
But that is not to say that the
Havana meeting was not important. Kirill’s mission was “to show the Vatican
that Catholicism should unite with an international of conservatives headed by
Russia.” In making that appeal, the patriarch demonstrated that “the technical
role of the Russian Orthodox Church hasn’t changed since Soviet times.”
The only thing that has changed is “the
content” of its message. As Melnikov
points out, “Russia has not rejected contacts with the West, but it wants not
dialogue with the liberal mainstream.” Rather it has placed its hopes on “the
conservative forces of Europe” and hopes the pope will join them.
Given Rome’s position on many social
issues in Europe and its interest in defending Christians in the Middle East, such
hopes are not without foundation. And the joint declaration enumerated many
areas where pope and patriarch agree.
But “it is only in this sense that the union of Churches has
significance.”
With regard to Ukraine, the “NG-Religii”
editor points out, there was “a compromise.” Rome will not promote the growth
of Uniatism, “but the Moscow Patriarchate promises to accept Greek Catholics as
a given and to co-exist with them in Ukraine.” That is a victory for the Greek
Catholics as much as they may not like to have their fate negotiated by others.
Melnikov concludes: “The meeting in
Havana was not so much about content as aobut symbols. But it symbolizes not
the historic reunification of the Churches but the development of a strategic
block of conservative forces of European orientation.” In short, both sides got some of what they
wanted but only by giving up something else.
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